Well............
In phosphorus cycle bacteria decomposes dead organisms and also fossils and phosphorus is available in organisms so when bacteria decompose them phosphorus is released
Phosphorus. "Unlike many other biogeochemical cycles, the atmosphere does not play a significant role in the movement of phosphorus, because phosphorus and phosphorus-based compounds are usually solids at the typical ranges of temperature and pressure found on Earth." - However, phosphorus WILL cycle through organisms and water. Water does (evaporation and precipitation both include the atmosphere). Carbon does (carbon dioxide is the third most common substance in the atmosphere). Nitrogen does (nitrogen makes up most of the atmosphere; Nitrogen-fixers depend on this fact).
If you are worried about the fact that this is a [2+2] cycloaddition, which you would expect to be forbidden, I would suggest (though this is out of my area) that the re-hybridisation of the phosphorus atom may be relevant, since the use of a d-orbital introduces an additional nodal plane.
Several bacteria can fix the nitrogen fom atmosphere.
Phosphorus, often leached from rocks and minerals, is an important component of soils. Phosphorus does not have an atmospheric form, so it is most often transported by water. Inorganic phosphorus is taken in by plants, incorporated into organic compounds, and moves up the food chain. Phosphorus is returned to the soil and rock cycle through decomposition of waste.
It occurs more slowly because phosphorus rarely occurs as a gas.
The atmosphere has no significant role in the phosphorus cycle, but is an essential part of the sulfur cycle.
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Producers (incorporate it into organic) and bacteria play a major role in the nitrogen cycle.
The long term cycle of phosphorus is that plants absorb inorganic phosphate. It is absorbed through the roots and then converted into organic phosphates. Animals then obtain the phosphorus by consuming the plants. The animals then excrete inorganic phosphorus in the urine. Bacteria break down the dead animals and plants and releases inorganic phosphorus to continue this cycle.
The phosphorus cycle is the biogeochemical cycle that describes the movement of phosphorus through the lithosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere.
Phosphorus. "Unlike many other biogeochemical cycles, the atmosphere does not play a significant role in the movement of phosphorus, because phosphorus and phosphorus-based compounds are usually solids at the typical ranges of temperature and pressure found on Earth." - However, phosphorus WILL cycle through organisms and water. Water does (evaporation and precipitation both include the atmosphere). Carbon does (carbon dioxide is the third most common substance in the atmosphere). Nitrogen does (nitrogen makes up most of the atmosphere; Nitrogen-fixers depend on this fact).
The atmosphere is not involved in the phosphorus cycle.
The atmosphere is not involved in the phosphorus cycle.
The atmosphere is not involved in the phosphorus cycle.
Bacteria is the organism most critical in the nitrogen cycle. Bacteria in the nitrogen cycle provides different forms of nitrogen compounds used by higher organisms.
To plants, phosphorus is a vital nutrient (second only to nitrogen). Plants absorb phosphates through their root hairs. Phosphorus then passes on through the food chain when the plants are consumed by other organisms.
The atmosphere is not involved in the phosphorus cycle.